Transcript Document

LECTURE PRESENTATIONS
For CAMPBELL BIOLOGY, NINTH EDITION
Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry, Michael L. Cain, Steven A. Wasserman, Peter V. Minorsky, Robert B. Jackson
Chapter 14
Mendel and the Gene Idea
Lectures by
Erin Barley
Kathleen Fitzpatrick
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Overview: Drawing from the Deck of Genes
• What genetic principles account for the passing
of traits from parents to offspring?
• The “blending” hypothesis is the idea that
genetic material from the two parents blends
together (like blue and yellow paint blend to
make green)
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• The “particulate” hypothesis is the idea that
parents pass on discrete heritable units
(genes)
• This hypothesis can explain the reappearance
of traits after several generations
• Mendel documented a particulate mechanism
through his experiments with garden peas
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 14.1
Concept 14.1: Mendel used the scientific
approach to identify two laws of inheritance
• Mendel discovered the basic principles of
heredity by breeding garden peas in carefully
planned experiments
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Mendel’s Experimental, Quantitative
Approach
• Advantages of pea plants for genetic study
– There are many varieties with distinct heritable
features, or characters (such as flower color);
character variants (such as purple or white
flowers) are called traits
– Mating can be controlled
– Each flower has sperm-producing organs
(stamens) and an egg-producing organ (carpel)
– Cross-pollination (fertilization between different
plants) involves dusting one plant with pollen
from another
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 14.2
TECHNIQUE
1
2
Parental
generation
(P)
3
Stamens
Carpel
4
RESULTS
First filial
generation
offspring
(F1)
5
Figure 14.2a
TECHNIQUE
1
2
Parental
generation
(P)
Stamens
3
Carpel
4
Figure 14.2b
RESULTS
First filial
generation
offspring
(F1)
5
• Mendel chose to track only those characters
that occurred in two distinct alternative forms
• He also used varieties that were true-breeding
(plants that produce offspring of the same
variety when they self-pollinate)
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• In a typical experiment, Mendel mated two
contrasting, true-breeding varieties, a process
called hybridization
• The true-breeding parents are the P generation
• The hybrid offspring of the P generation are called
the F1 generation
• When F1 individuals self-pollinate or crosspollinate with other F1 hybrids, the F2 generation
is produced
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
The Law of Segregation
• When Mendel crossed contrasting, truebreeding white- and purple-flowered pea plants,
all of the F1 hybrids were purple
• When Mendel crossed the F1 hybrids, many of
the F2 plants had purple flowers, but some had
white
• Mendel discovered a ratio of about three to one,
purple to white flowers, in the F2 generation
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 14.3-1
EXPERIMENT
P Generation
(true-breeding
parents)
Purple
flowers
White
flowers
Figure 14.3-2
EXPERIMENT
P Generation
(true-breeding
parents)
F1 Generation
(hybrids)
Purple
flowers
White
flowers
All plants had purple flowers
Self- or cross-pollination
Figure 14.3-3
EXPERIMENT
P Generation
(true-breeding
parents)
Purple
flowers
White
flowers
F1 Generation
(hybrids)
All plants had purple flowers
Self- or cross-pollination
F2 Generation
705 purpleflowered
plants
224 white
flowered
plants
• Mendel reasoned that only the purple flower
factor was affecting flower color in the F1 hybrids
• Mendel called the purple flower color a dominant
trait and the white flower color a recessive trait
• The factor for white flowers was not diluted or
destroyed because it reappeared in the F2
generation
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• Mendel observed the same pattern of
inheritance in six other pea plant characters,
each represented by two traits
• What Mendel called a “heritable factor” is what
we now call a gene
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Table 14.1
Mendel’s Model
• Mendel developed a hypothesis to explain the
3:1 inheritance pattern he observed in F2
offspring
• Four related concepts make up this model
• These concepts can be related to what we now
know about genes and chromosomes
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• First: alternative versions of genes account for
variations in inherited characters
• For example, the gene for flower color in pea
plants exists in two versions, one for purple
flowers and the other for white flowers
• These alternative versions of a gene are now
called alleles
• Each gene resides at a specific locus on a
specific chromosome
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 14.4
Allele for purple flowers
Locus for flower-color gene
Pair of
homologous
chromosomes
Allele for white flowers
• Second: for each character, an organism
inherits two alleles, one from each parent
• Mendel made this deduction without knowing
about the role of chromosomes
• The two alleles at a particular locus may be
identical, as in the true-breeding plants of
Mendel’s P generation
• Alternatively, the two alleles at a locus may
differ, as in the F1 hybrids
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• Third: if the two alleles at a locus differ, then one
(the dominant allele) determines the organism’s
appearance, and the other (the recessive allele)
has no noticeable effect on appearance
• In the flower-color example, the F1 plants had
purple flowers because the allele for that trait is
dominant
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• Fourth (now known as the law of segregation):
the two alleles for a heritable character separate
(segregate) during gamete formation and end up
in different gametes
• Thus, an egg or a sperm gets only one of the two
alleles that are present in the organism
• This segregation of alleles corresponds to the
distribution of homologous chromosomes to
different gametes in meiosis
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• Mendel’s segregation model accounts for the 3:1
ratio he observed in the F2 generation of his
numerous crosses
• The possible combinations of sperm and egg can
be shown using a Punnett square, a diagram for
predicting the results of a genetic cross between
individuals of known genetic makeup
• A capital letter represents a dominant allele, and a
lowercase letter represents a recessive allele
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 14.5-1
P Generation
Appearance:
Purple flowers White flowers
Genetic makeup:
pp
PP
p
Gametes:
P
Figure 14.5-2
P Generation
Appearance:
Purple flowers White flowers
Genetic makeup:
pp
PP
p
Gametes:
P
F1 Generation
Appearance:
Genetic makeup:
Gametes:
Purple flowers
Pp
1/
1/
2 p
2 P
Figure 14.5-3
P Generation
Appearance:
Purple flowers White flowers
Genetic makeup:
pp
PP
p
Gametes:
P
F1 Generation
Appearance:
Genetic makeup:
Gametes:
Purple flowers
Pp
1/
1/
2 p
2 P
Sperm from F1 (Pp) plant
F2 Generation
P
Eggs from
F1 (Pp) plant
p
3
P
p
PP
Pp
Pp
pp
:1
Useful Genetic Vocabulary
• An organism with two identical alleles for a
character is said to be homozygous for the
gene controlling that character
• An organism that has two different alleles for a
gene is said to be heterozygous for the gene
controlling that character
• Unlike homozygotes, heterozygotes are not
true-breeding
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• Because of the different effects of dominant and
recessive alleles, an organism’s traits do not
always reveal its genetic composition
• Therefore, we distinguish between an organism’s
phenotype, or physical appearance, and its
genotype, or genetic makeup
• In the example of flower color in pea plants, PP
and Pp plants have the same phenotype (purple)
but different genotypes
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 14.6
3
Phenotype
Genotype
Purple
PP
(homozygous)
Purple
Pp
(heterozygous)
1
2
1
Purple
Pp
(heterozygous)
White
pp
(homozygous)
Ratio 3:1
Ratio 1:2:1
1
The Testcross
• How can we tell the genotype of an individual with
the dominant phenotype?
• Such an individual could be either homozygous
dominant or heterozygous
• The answer is to carry out a testcross: breeding
the mystery individual with a homozygous
recessive individual
• If any offspring display the recessive phenotype,
the mystery parent must be heterozygous
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 14.7
TECHNIQUE
Dominant phenotype,
unknown genotype:
PP or Pp?
Predictions
If purple-flowered
parent is PP
Sperm
p
p
Recessive phenotype,
known genotype:
pp
or
If purple-flowered
parent is Pp
Sperm
p
p
P
Pp
Eggs
P
Pp
Eggs
P
p
Pp
Pp
Pp
Pp
pp
pp
RESULTS
or
All offspring purple
1/
2
offspring purple and
1/ offspring white
2
The Law of Independent Assortment
• Mendel derived the law of segregation by
following a single character
• The F1 offspring produced in this cross were
monohybrids, individuals that are
heterozygous for one character
• A cross between such heterozygotes is called
a monohybrid cross
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• Mendel identified his second law of inheritance by
following two characters at the same time
• Crossing two true-breeding parents differing in two
characters produces dihybrids in the F1
generation, heterozygous for both characters
• A dihybrid cross, a cross between F1 dihybrids,
can determine whether two characters are
transmitted to offspring as a package or
independently
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 14.8
EXPERIMENT
YYRR
P Generation
yyrr
yr
Gametes YR
F1 Generation
Predictions
YyRr
Hypothesis of
dependent assortment
Hypothesis of
independent assortment
Sperm
or
Predicted
offspring of
F2 generation
1/
Sperm
1/
2
YR
1/
2
2
YR
YyRr
YYRR
Eggs
1/
2
1/
4
YR
4
Yr
4
yR
4
yr
Eggs
yr
YyRr
3/
yyrr
1/
4
YR
1/
4
1/
Yr
4
yR
1/
4
yr
yr
1/
1/
4
1/
YYRR
YYRr
YyRR
YyRr
YYRr
YYrr
YyRr
Yyrr
YyRR
YyRr
yyRR
yyRr
YyRr
Yyrr
yyRr
yyrr
4
Phenotypic ratio 3:1
1/
9/
16
3/
16
3/
16
1/
16
Phenotypic ratio 9:3:3:1
RESULTS
315
108
101
32
Phenotypic ratio approximately 9:3:3:1
• Using a dihybrid cross, Mendel developed the
law of independent assortment
• The law of independent assortment states that
each pair of alleles segregates independently of
each other pair of alleles during gamete
formation
• Strictly speaking, this law applies only to genes
on different, nonhomologous chromosomes or
those far apart on the same chromosome
• Genes located near each other on the same
chromosome tend to be inherited together
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Concept 14.2: The laws of probability
govern Mendelian inheritance
• Mendel’s laws of segregation and independent
assortment reflect the rules of probability
• When tossing a coin, the outcome of one toss
has no impact on the outcome of the next toss
• In the same way, the alleles of one gene
segregate into gametes independently of
another gene’s alleles
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
The Multiplication and Addition Rules
Applied to Monohybrid Crosses
• The multiplication rule states that the probability
that two or more independent events will occur
together is the product of their individual
probabilities
• Probability in an F1 monohybrid cross can be
determined using the multiplication rule
• Segregation in a heterozygous plant is like flipping
a coin: Each gamete has a 1 2 chance of carrying
the dominant allele and a 1 2 chance of carrying the
recessive allele
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 14.9
Rr
Segregation of
alleles into eggs

Rr
Segregation of
alleles into sperm
Sperm
1/
R
2
2
Eggs
4
r
2
r
R
R
1/
1/
r
2
R
R
1/
1/
1/
4
r
r
R
r
1/
4
1/
4
• The addition rule states that the probability that
any one of two or more exclusive events will
occur is calculated by adding together their
individual probabilities
• The rule of addition can be used to figure out the
probability that an F2 plant from a monohybrid
cross will be heterozygous rather than
homozygous
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Solving Complex Genetics Problems with the
Rules of Probability
• We can apply the multiplication and addition
rules to predict the outcome of crosses involving
multiple characters
• A dihybrid or other multicharacter cross is
equivalent to two or more independent
monohybrid crosses occurring simultaneously
• In calculating the chances for various genotypes,
each character is considered separately, and
then the individual probabilities are multiplied
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 14.UN01
Probability of YYRR  1/4 (probability of YY)  1/4 (RR)  1/16
Probability of YyRR  1/2 (Yy)
 1/4 (RR)  1/8
Figure 14.UN02
ppyyRr
ppYyrr
Ppyyrr
PPyyrr
ppyyrr
1/ (yy)  1/ (Rr)
(probability
of
pp)

4
2
2
1/  1/  1/
4
2
2
1/  1/  1/
2
2
2
1/  1/  1/
4
2
2
1/  1/  1/
4
2
2
1/
Chance of at least two recessive traits
 1/16
 1/16
 2/16
 1/16
 1/16
 6/16 or 3/8
Concept 14.3: Inheritance patterns are often
more complex than predicted by simple
Mendelian genetics
• The relationship between genotype and
phenotype is rarely as simple as in the pea
plant characters Mendel studied
• Many heritable characters are not determined
by only one gene with two alleles
• However, the basic principles of segregation
and independent assortment apply even to
more complex patterns of inheritance
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Extending Mendelian Genetics for a Single
Gene
• Inheritance of characters by a single gene may
deviate from simple Mendelian patterns in the
following situations:
– When alleles are not completely dominant or
recessive
– When a gene has more than two alleles
– When a gene produces multiple phenotypes
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Degrees of Dominance
• Complete dominance occurs when phenotypes
of the heterozygote and dominant homozygote are
identical
• In incomplete dominance, the phenotype of F1
hybrids is somewhere between the phenotypes of
the two parental varieties
• In codominance, two dominant alleles affect the
phenotype in separate, distinguishable ways
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 14.10-1
P Generation
White
CWCW
Red
CRCR
Gametes
CR
CW
Figure 14.10-2
P Generation
White
CWCW
Red
CRCR
Gametes
CR
CW
F1 Generation
Gametes 1/2 CR
Pink
CRCW
1/
2
CW
Figure 14.10-3
P Generation
White
CWCW
Red
CRCR
CR
Gametes
CW
F1 Generation
Pink
CRCW
1/
Gametes 1/2 CR
2
CW
Sperm
F2 Generation
1/
2
CR
1/
2
CW
Eggs
1/
2
CR
1/
2
CW
CRCR CRCW
CRCW CWCW
The Relation Between Dominance and
Phenotype
• A dominant allele does not subdue a recessive
allele; alleles don’t interact that way
• Alleles are simply variations in a gene’s
nucleotide sequence
• For any character, dominance/recessiveness
relationships of alleles depend on the level at
which we examine the phenotype
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• Tay-Sachs disease is fatal; a dysfunctional
enzyme causes an accumulation of lipids in the
brain
– At the organismal level, the allele is recessive
– At the biochemical level, the phenotype (i.e.,
the enzyme activity level) is incompletely
dominant
– At the molecular level, the alleles are
codominant
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Frequency of Dominant Alleles
• Dominant alleles are not necessarily more
common in populations than recessive alleles
• For example, one baby out of 400 in the United
States is born with extra fingers or toes
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• The allele for this unusual trait is dominant to the
allele for the more common trait of five digits per
appendage
• In this example, the recessive allele is far more
prevalent than the population’s dominant allele
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Multiple Alleles
• Most genes exist in populations in more than two
allelic forms
• For example, the four phenotypes of the ABO
blood group in humans are determined by three
alleles for the enzyme (I) that attaches A or B
carbohydrates to red blood cells: IA, IB, and i.
• The enzyme encoded by the IA allele adds the A
carbohydrate, whereas the enzyme encoded by
the IB allele adds the B carbohydrate; the enzyme
encoded by the i allele adds neither
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 14.11
(a) The three alleles for the ABO blood groups and their
carbohydrates
IA
Allele
Carbohydrate
IB
i
none
B
A
(b) Blood group genotypes and phenotypes
Genotype
IAIA or IAi
IBIB or IBi
IAIB
ii
A
B
AB
O
Red blood cell
appearance
Phenotype
(blood group)
Pleiotropy
• Most genes have multiple phenotypic effects, a
property called pleiotropy
• For example, pleiotropic alleles are responsible for
the multiple symptoms of certain hereditary
diseases, such as cystic fibrosis and sickle-cell
disease
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Extending Mendelian Genetics for Two or
More Genes
• Some traits may be determined by two or more
genes
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Epistasis
• In epistasis, a gene at one locus alters the
phenotypic expression of a gene at a second
locus
• For example, in Labrador retrievers and many
other mammals, coat color depends on two
genes
• One gene determines the pigment color (with
alleles B for black and b for brown)
• The other gene (with alleles C for color and c
for no color) determines whether the pigment
will be deposited in the hair
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 14.12
BbEe
Eggs
1/
4 BE
1/
4 bE
1/
4 Be
1/
4
be
Sperm
1/ BE
4
1/
BbEe
4 bE
1/
4 Be
1/
4 be
BBEE
BbEE
BBEe
BbEe
BbEE
bbEE
BbEe
bbEe
BBEe
BbEe
BBee
Bbee
BbEe
bbEe
Bbee
bbee
9
: 3
: 4
Polygenic Inheritance
• Quantitative characters are those that vary in the
population along a continuum
• Quantitative variation usually indicates polygenic
inheritance, an additive effect of two or more
genes on a single phenotype
• Skin color in humans is an example of polygenic
inheritance
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 14.13
AaBbCc
AaBbCc
Sperm
1/
1/
8
8
1/
1/
Eggs
8
1/
1/
8
8
1/
8
1/
1/
8
8
8
8
1/
8
1/
8
1/
1/
8
1/
8
1/
8
1/
8
Phenotypes:
Number of
dark-skin alleles:
1/
64
0
6/
64
1
15/
64
2
20/
64
3
15/
64
4
6/
64
5
1/
64
6
Nature and Nurture: The Environmental
Impact on Phenotype
• Another departure from Mendelian genetics
arises when the phenotype for a character
depends on environment as well as genotype
• The norm of reaction is the phenotypic range
of a genotype influenced by the environment
• For example, hydrangea flowers of the same
genotype range from blue-violet to pink,
depending on soil acidity
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 14.14
• Norms of reaction are generally broadest for
polygenic characters
• Such characters are called multifactorial
because genetic and environmental factors
collectively influence phenotype
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Integrating a Mendelian View of Heredity
and Variation
• An organism’s phenotype includes its physical
appearance, internal anatomy, physiology, and
behavior
• An organism’s phenotype reflects its overall
genotype and unique environmental history
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Concept 14.4: Many human traits follow
Mendelian patterns of inheritance
• Humans are not good subjects for genetic
research
– Generation time is too long
– Parents produce relatively few offspring
– Breeding experiments are unacceptable
• However, basic Mendelian genetics endures
as the foundation of human genetics
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Pedigree Analysis
• A pedigree is a family tree that describes the
interrelationships of parents and children
across generations
• Inheritance patterns of particular traits can be
traced and described using pedigrees
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 14.15
Key
Male
1st
generation
Affected
male
Female
Affected
female
Mating
1st
generation
Ww
ww
Ww
ww
2nd
generation
Ww
ww
3rd
generation
WW
or
Ww
Widow’s
peak
ff
ff
(a) Is a widow’s peak a dominant or
recessive trait?
Ff
Ff
Ff
ff
ff
FF
or
Ff
3rd
generation
ww
No widow’s
peak
ff
Ff
2nd
generation
FF or Ff
Ww ww ww Ww
Ff
Offspring
Attached
earlobe
Free
earlobe
b) Is an attached earlobe a dominant
or recessive trait?
• Pedigrees can also be used to make
predictions about future offspring
• We can use the multiplication and addition
rules to predict the probability of specific
phenotypes
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Recessively Inherited Disorders
• Many genetic disorders are inherited in a
recessive manner
• These range from relatively mild to lifethreatening
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
The Behavior of Recessive Alleles
• Recessively inherited disorders show up only in
individuals homozygous for the allele
• Carriers are heterozygous individuals who
carry the recessive allele but are phenotypically
normal; most individuals with recessive
disorders are born to carrier parents
• Albinism is a recessive condition characterized
by a lack of pigmentation in skin and hair
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 14.16
Parents
Normal
Aa
Normal
Aa
Sperm
A
a
A
AA
Normal
Aa
Normal
(carrier)
a
Aa
Normal
(carrier)
aa
Albino
Eggs
• If a recessive allele that causes a disease is
rare, then the chance of two carriers meeting
and mating is low
• Consanguineous matings (i.e., matings
between close relatives) increase the
chance of mating between two carriers of
the same rare allele
• Most societies and cultures have laws or
taboos against marriages between close
relatives
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Cystic Fibrosis
• Cystic fibrosis is the most common lethal
genetic disease in the United States,striking
one out of every 2,500 people of European
descent
• The cystic fibrosis allele results in defective or
absent chloride transport channels in plasma
membranes leading to a buildup of chloride
ions outside the cell
• Symptoms include mucus buildup in some
internal organs and abnormal absorption of
nutrients in the small intestine
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Sickle-Cell Disease: A Genetic Disorder with
Evolutionary Implications
• Sickle-cell disease affects one out of 400
African-Americans
• The disease is caused by the substitution of a
single amino acid in the hemoglobin protein in
red blood cells
• In homozygous individuals, all hemoglobin is
abnormal (sickle-cell)
• Symptoms include physical weakness, pain,
organ damage, and even paralysis
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Fig. 14-UN1
• Heterozygotes (said to have sickle-cell trait) are
usually healthy but may suffer some symptoms
• About one out of ten African Americans has
sickle cell trait, an unusually high frequency of
an allele with detrimental effects in
homozygotes
• Heterozygotes are less susceptible to the
malaria parasite, so there is an advantage to
being heterozygous
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Dominantly Inherited Disorders
• Some human disorders are caused by
dominant alleles
• Dominant alleles that cause a lethal disease
are rare and arise by mutation
• Achondroplasia is a form of dwarfism caused
by a rare dominant allele
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 14.17
Parents
Dwarf
Dd
Normal
dd
Sperm
D
d
d
Dd
Dwarf
dd
Normal
d
Dd
Dwarf
dd
Normal
Eggs
Huntington’s Disease: A Late-Onset Lethal
Disease
• The timing of onset of a disease significantly
affects its inheritance
• Huntington’s disease is a degenerative disease
of the nervous system
• The disease has no obvious phenotypic effects
until the individual is about 35 to 40 years of age
• Once the deterioration of the nervous system
begins the condition is irreversible and fatal
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Multifactorial Disorders
• Many diseases, such as heart disease,
diabetes, alcoholism, mental illnesses, and
cancer have both genetic and environmental
components
• Little is understood about the genetic
contribution to most multifactorial diseases
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Genetic Testing and Counseling
• Genetic counselors can provide information to
prospective parents concerned about a family
history for a specific disease
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Counseling Based on Mendelian Genetics
and Probability Rules
• Using family histories, genetic counselors help
couples determine the odds that their children
will have genetic disorders
• Probabilities are predicted on the most
accurate information at the time; predicted
probabilities may change as new information
is available
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Tests for Identifying Carriers
• For a growing number of diseases, tests are
available that identify carriers and help define the
odds more accurately
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 14.18
Fetal Testing
• In amniocentesis, the liquid that bathes the
fetus is removed and tested
• In chorionic villus sampling (CVS), a sample
of the placenta is removed and tested
• Other techniques, such as ultrasound and
fetoscopy, allow fetal health to be assessed
visually in utero
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Video: Ultrasound of Human Fetus I
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 14.19
(a) Amniocentesis
1
(b) Chorionic villus sampling (CVS)
Ultrasound monitor
Amniotic
fluid
withdrawn
Ultrasound
monitor
Fetus
1
Placenta
Chorionic villi
Fetus
Placenta
Uterus
Cervix
Cervix
Uterus
Suction
tube
inserted
through
cervix
Centrifugation
Fluid
Fetal
cells
Several hours
2
Several
weeks
Biochemical
and genetic
tests
Several
hours
Fetal cells
2
Several hours
Several weeks
3
Karyotyping
Newborn Screening
• Some genetic disorders can be detected at birth
by simple tests that are now routinely performed
in most hospitals in the United States
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 14.UN03
Relationship among
alleles of a single gene
Complete dominance
of one allele
Description
Heterozygous phenotype
same as that of homozygous dominant
Incomplete dominance Heterozygous phenotype
intermediate between
of either allele
the two homozygous
phenotypes
Codominance
Both phenotypes
expressed in
heterozygotes
Example
PP
Pp
CRCR CRCW CWCW
IAIB
Multiple alleles
In the whole population, ABO blood group alleles
some genes have more
IA, IB, i
than two alleles
Pleiotropy
One gene is able to affect Sickle-cell disease
multiple phenotypic
characters
Figure 14.UN04
Relationship among
two or more genes
Epistasis
Description
The phenotypic
expression of one
gene affects that
of another
Example
BbEe
BE
BbEe
bE
Be
be
BE
bE
Be
be
9
Polygenic inheritance
A single phenotypic
character is affected
by two or more genes
AaBbCc
:3
:4
AaBbCc
Figure 14.UN07
George
Sandra
Tom
Sam
Arlene
Wilma
Ann
Michael
Carla
Daniel
Alan
Tina
Christopher
Figure 14.UN08
Figure 14.UN09
Figure 14.UN10
Figure 14.UN11
Figure 14.UN12
Figure 14.UN13
LECTURE PRESENTATIONS
For CAMPBELL BIOLOGY, NINTH EDITION
Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry, Michael L. Cain, Steven A. Wasserman, Peter V. Minorsky, Robert B. Jackson
Chapter 14
Mendel and the Gene Idea
Questions prepared by
Janet Lanza
University of Arkansas at Little Rock
Lectures
by
Louise
Paquin
Erin Barley
McDaniel
College
Kathleen Fitzpatrick
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Independent Assortment
Imagine crossing a pea heterozygous at the loci for
flower color (white versus purple) and seed color
(yellow versus green) with a second pea homozygous
for flower color (white) and seed color (yellow). What
types of gametes will the first pea produce?
a) two gamete types: white/white and purple/purple
b) two gamete types: white/yellow and purple/green
c) four gamete types: white/yellow, white/green,
purple/yellow, purple/green
d) four gamete types: white/purple,
yellow/green,white/white, and purple/purple
e) one gamete type: white/purple/yellow/green
Pea plants were particularly well suited for
use in Mendel's breeding experiments for all
of the following reasons except that
a) peas show easily observed variations in a number of
characters, such as pea shape and flower color.
b) it is possible to control matings between different pea
plants.
c) it is possible to obtain large numbers of progeny from any
given cross.
d) peas have an unusually long generation time.
e) many of the observable characters that vary in pea plants
are controlled by single genes.
A cross between homozygous purpleflowered and homozygous white-flowered
pea plants results in offspring with purple
flowers. This demonstrates
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
the blending model of genetics.
true-breeding.
dominance.
a dihybrid cross.
the mistakes made by Mendel.
Imagine a genetic counselor working with a couple who have just
had a child who is suffering from Tay-Sachs disease. Neither
parent has Tay-Sachs, nor does anyone in their families. Which
of the following statements should this counselor make to this
couple?
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
“Because no one in either of your families has Tay-Sachs, you are not
likely to have another baby with Tay-Sachs. You can safely have
another child.”
“Because you have had one child with Tay-Sachs, you must each
carry the allele. Any child you have has a 50% chance of having the
disease.”
“Because you have had one child with Tay-Sachs, you must each
carry the allele. Any child you have has a 25% chance of having the
disease.”
“Because you have had one child with Tay-Sachs, you must both carry
the allele. However, since the chance of having an affected child is
25%, you may safely have thee more children without worrying about
having another child with Tay-Sachs.”
“You must both be tested to see who is a carrier of the Tay-Sachs
allele.”
Albinism in humans occurs when both alleles at a
locus produce defective enzymes in the biochemical
pathway leading to melanin. Given that heterozygotes
are normally pigmented, which of the following
statements is/are correct?
a) One normal allele produces as much melanin as two normal
alleles.
b) Each defective allele produces a little bit of melanin.
c) Two normal alleles are needed for normal melanin
production.
d) The two alleles are codominant.
e) The amount of sunlight will not affect skin color of
heterozygotes.
Imagine that the last step in a biochemical pathway to the red
skin pigment of an apple is catalyzed by enzyme X, which
changes compound C to compound D. If an effective enzyme is
present, compound D is formed and the apple skin is red.
However, if the enzyme is not effective, only compound C is
present and the skin is yellow. Thinking about enzyme action,
what can you accurately say about a heterozygote with one allele
for an effective enzyme X and one allele for an ineffective enzyme
X?
a) The phenotype will probably be
yellow but cannot be red.
b) The phenotype will probably be red
but cannot be yellow.
c) The phenotype will be a yellowish
red.
d) The phenotype will be either yellow
or red.
e) The phenotype will be either
yellowish red or red.
In humans, alleles for dark hair are
genetically dominant, while alleles for
light hair are recessive. Which of the
following statements is/are most likely to
be correct?
a) Dark hair alleles are more common than light hair alleles in
all areas of Europe.
b) Dark hair alleles are more common than light hair alleles in
southern Europe but not in northern Europe.
c) Dark hair alleles are equally common in all parts of Europe.
d) Dark hair is dominant to light hair in southern Europe but
recessive to light hair in northern Europe.
e) Dark hair is dominant to light hair in northern Europe but
recessive to light hair in southern Europe.
Imagine a locus with four different alleles for
fur color in an animal. The alleles are named
Da, Db, Dc, and Dd. If you crossed two
heterozygotes, DaDb and DcDd, what genotype
proportions would you expect in the
offspring?
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
25% DaDc, 25% DaDd, 25% DbDc, 25% DbDd
50% DaDb, 50% DcDd
25% DaDa, 25% DbDb, 25% DcDc, 25% DdDdDcDd
50% DaDc, 50% DbDd
25% DaDb, 25% DcDd, 25% DcDc, 25% DdDd
Imagine a family with two parents who both
maintain low fat levels through a combination of
aerobic activity and weight training. Which of the
following statements is/are most likely to apply to
their two children?
a) The parents’ fat levels are irrelevant to the fat levels of the
children.
b) One child is likely to have low fat levels but the other is
more likely to have high fat levels because of independent
assortment of genes.
c) The children may not have the same fat levels as their
parents because genes independently assort during
meiosis.
Envision a family in which the grandfather, age 47, has
just been diagnosed with Huntington’s disease. His
daughter, age 25, now has a 2-year-old baby boy. No
one else in the family has the disease. What is the
probability that the daughter will contract the disease?
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
0%
25%
50%
75%
100%
Review the family described in the previous
question. What is the probability that the baby
will contract the disease?
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
0%
25%
50%
75%
100%
Imagine that you are the daughter in the family
described in the previous questions. You had been
planning on having a second child. What kind of
choices would you make about genetic testing, for
yourself and for your child?
When a disease is said to have a multifactorial
basis, it means that
a) both genetic and environmental factors contribute
to the disease.
b) it is caused by a gene with a large number of
alleles.
c) it affects a large number of people.
d) it has many different symptoms.
e) it tends to skip a generation.